The Fed Is Banking on Hedge Funds, But Merrill Lynch Can't
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The Wall Street Journal's “Fed May Give Private Equity More Leeway to Help Banks” reports that Federal Reserve officials have met with J.C. Flowers, Carlyle Group, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Warburg Pincus. Not unknown to panic, Bernanke’s Fed now wants to encourage private equity to play a bigger role in funding bank recapitalization. Private equity does not want the oversight incurred with a 10% or greater investment.
Former Fed Chairman Greenspan fought hard to keep Congress and the SEC off the backs of private equity and hedge funds. Now Bernanke has to go one step further to get them to play ball. Under current law, a stake greater than 9.9% incurs regulatory oversight to insure the stake holder is not exerting control. Equity holders above a 24.9% stake must register as bank holding companies. The current compromise is that the Fed determines control by the number of Board seats, generally limiting a 10% plus stakeholder to one seat.
The funds have generally acted in concert with other large investors to ease the regulator burden. Now the Fed is concerned that the other investment pools are drying up, and wants to know what would be needed to motivate greater private equity participations. The Journal says the funds want total control without government supervision into their other affairs. It looks like Bernanke will continue Greenspan’s policies and be as accommodating as possible.
TPG led an investment group putting $7B into Washington Mutual (WM) and Corsair Capital led an investment group putting $7B into National City (NCC).
The related Journal article “Merrill's Hard Decisions” reports that Merrill Lynch (MER) must make its prior investors whole if it sells common stock at a lower price, or sells preferreds that convert to common at a lower price. Participants in the most recent $12B capital raising round would be entitled to cash or stock compensation. Given the recent collapse in Merrill share price, this provision would be quite dilutive. I believe that WaMu and National City face the same provision. These price protection provisions last 12 to 24 months, depending on the deals and participants.
The Journal implies that each bank’s round two will have to rely on asset sales. UBS (UBS) was first up, selling a $22B block of mortgages for $15B. Unfortunately, they also had to finance most of the deal. Merrill is better positioned with a 20% stake in Bloomberg and a 49% stake in BlackRock (BLK) available. Those two could be worth up to $18B. Lehman (LEH) announced asset sales during its conference call, and Citigroup (C) is also shrinking its balance sheet.
The Fed might be more concerned with the smaller regional banks that have not yet hit the trough. How can BankUnited (BKUNA) raise $400M without giving up control, when its stock price is hovering around a dollar?
Disclosure: Author is long BKUNA, C, NCC, UBS and WM. (All the junk!)
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This article has 5 comments:
Wendling
Thank you
Richard
What's even more interesting than the stock performance of C, NCC, WM, BKUNA etc is the frenzied excuse making and conspiracy theorizing that so much of the investment community indulges in rather than acknowledge that they backed incompetent management.